Wednesday, April 21, 2021
By Kyle Troutman editor@cassville-democrat.com
Cassvilles Gabe Hunter signs a letter of intent to wrestle at William Penn University in the fall. Kyle Troutman/editor@cassville-democrat.com
Wildcat wrestler first to sign for next-level intent
Cassville wrestler Gabe Hunter is one of the most unorthodox wrestlers on the Wildcats roster, and his path to signing a letter of intent to William Penn University was no different.
Hunter is the first wrestler out of the Cassville program to sign to a college, and his aspiration to compete at the next level was reflected in how he chose the Statesmen.
Credits: Photo: Maria Thi Mai and Toshio Suzuki Caption: Clockwise, from top left: Ed Jahn, Aaron Scott, David Steves, Laura Gibson, Robbie Carver, Peter Frick-Wright Credits: Photos courtesy of Aaron Scott, Oregon Public Broadcasting.
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The Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT has named Oregon Public Broadcasting’s “Timber Wars” podcast as 2021 winner of the prestigious Victor K. McElheny Award for local and regional science journalism. The seven-part series tells the story of how a group of activists and scientists turned a fight over logging and animal protection into one of the biggest environmental conflicts of the 20th century a conflict that still resonates in culture wars today. The podcast is the first work of audio journalism to win the McElheny Award in the competition’s three-year history.
Prosecutor drops charges on eve of murder trial nwitimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nwitimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Bellevue police agree to $125K settlement after a call for a welfare check ends with handcuffs, criminal charge and injury By Mike Carter, The Seattle Times
Published: March 14, 2021, 12:30pm
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Kellie Burlingham and her husband, Marc Ramsey, were yanked out of sleep one night in 2017 by a commotion in the living room. Kellie’s 23-year-old son, Quentin, was yelling. She heard other, strange voices in her home as well, raised and commanding.
The couple emerged from their bedroom to find three Bellevue police officers in their living room, struggling to restrain the pajama-clad Quentin, who is autistic. The officers were pushing him down into a chair and pulling out their handcuffs.
Correspondent
JEWETT The Custer Memorial Association is making plans for its annual June observance and preparing the museum and monument grounds for the upcoming spring, summer and autumn seasons.
The museum will be open on the last Sunday of April through September from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Masks will be necessary as directed and practicing social distancing will be necessary. If there are visitors at one section of the room, guests will be asked to advance to another display until the desired area is free of visitors, according to David Rose, president. For informattion, contact Rose at darose02@frontier.com or call (740) 945-4744.